
ITCN Asia 2025: a potential glimpse into Pakistan's future
Photo Credits: Syed Alihasan Agha
Karachi just hosted ITCN Asia 2025, and instead of the usual dry tech fair vibes, it felt like stepping into a mash-up of Silicon Valley ambition and local startup hustle.
Picture AI that overlays onto NASA maps, VR headsets dropping you into surreal new worlds, and fintech founders arguing over who’s reinventing money the fastest. It was almost too much to keep up with.
Read: ITCN Asia 2025: where AI crossed borders and I nearly got lost in the cloud
Beyond the spectacle, the event showed how Pakistan’s IT and telecom industry is evolving, from homegrown startups trying to scale to the global stage to big names scouting fresh opportunities in the region.
It wasn’t just about gadgets on display with the 300+ global brands making their appearances, but about where Pakistan sits in the tech race, and where we're headed next.
You WILL consume AI content. You WILL enjoy it.
Source: imgflip.com
AI-generated content that people post is inextricably mixed into the real videos and posts people make. Sometimes you can tell them apart and sometimes you can’t, but for better or worse, Meta has made it easier for us now.
The Meta AI app has a ‘Vibes’ feed now, a dedicated home for AI-generated short-form content in the app and website. I’m not sure what possessed them to name it ‘Vibes’, because what does that have to do with AI, specifically? The only vibes I get are bad ones, to be sure.
Read more: Microsoft suspends services to Israeli military unit over probe into monitoring of Palestinians
If that wasn’t enough, Zuckerberg is saying that Vibes is an early form of some new products they’re exploring. We can expect more AI-generated, managed, and propagated content in the future.
To actual artists and content creators, the future’s looking bright, guys. Like the headlights of an oncoming car.
Skin in the game: Islamabad’s sci-fi burn treatment
Image created using Gemini
Pakistan has just unlocked a sci-fi leap in medicine: its very first skin bank at Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences, Islamabad.
Instead of burn victims enduring painful grafts taken from their own bodies, doctors can now culture tiny tissue samples into life-saving skin, store them for years, and graft them when needed, much like a blood bank for burns.
Backed by Shaheed Zulfikar Ali Bhutto Medical University and awaiting the Drug Regulatory Authority of Pakistan's green light, this breakthrough promises faster healing, fewer complications, and dramatically lower costs, marking a historic shift in how the country treats severe burn injuries.
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